Included support
- +Hospital matching
- +Record review
- +Care coordination
- +Travel support
- +Interpretation support

Resection can be considered when benign vascular lesions of the nasal cavity/paranasal sinuses cause recurrent bleeding, significant nasal obstruction, or recurrent infections, and imaging assessment suggests the lesion is localized and has an endoscopic surgical approach. The decision comprehensive
24-72h
Response window
Approx. $2,100
Treatment fee
Peking Union Medical College Hospital - Beijing - Grade 3A
Ruijin Hospital - Shanghai - Grade 3A
West China Hospital - Chengdu - Grade 3A
Let us coordinate the treatment journey with you.
If applicable, the extent of the lesion is assessed preoperatively based on imaging and nasal endoscopy. For those with rich blood supply, a specialist may evaluate whether to perform interventional embolization first. Surgery is usually performed under direct endoscopic vision, separating and removing the lesion with microdebriders or cold instruments, and combined with bipolar electrocoagulation, hemostatic materials, and irrigation. Postoperatively, the focus is on observing bleeding and airway patency. After stabilization, nasal cavity cleaning and follow-up are performed, with the goal of removing the lesion and preserving normal structures. The above is general health information, not medical advice; the specific plan is subject to specialist evaluation and hospital protocols.
If applicable, the extent of the lesion is assessed preoperatively based on imaging and nasal endoscopy. For those with rich blood supply, a specialist may evaluate whether to perform interventional embolization first. Surgery is usually performed under direct endoscopic vision, separating and removing the lesion with microdebriders or cold instruments, and combined with bipolar electrocoagulation, hemostatic materials, and irrigation. Postoperatively, the focus is on observing bleeding and airway patency. After stabilization, nasal cavity cleaning and follow-up are performed, with the goal of removing the lesion and preserving normal structures. The above is general health information, not medical advice; the specific plan is subject to specialist evaluation and hospital protocols.

Combining preoperative evaluation + hospitalization treatment + postoperative follow-up, a total of 10–16 days is generally recommended, subject to the actual schedule and hospital arrangements.

Tell us about your Nasal Hemangioma case and we will help match you with the right hospital, specialist, and travel pathway.